CAN LEPTOSPIRA SPECIES PENETRATE
STERILIZING-GRADE FILTERS?
(Leptospiral
challenges for sterile filtration)
|
FDA is
aware of a recent report of Leptospira
licerasiae contamination in cell cultures. There is no indication that this
bacterium ultimately contaminated either the finished drug substance or drug
product. This bacterium has been found to pass through 0.1 µm pore size rated
sterilizing-grade membrane filters. While this specific species was the
identified contaminant in this case, other Leptospira species also are
capable of passing through 0.1 µm pore size rated filters. Compendial
microbiological test methods typically used in association with upstream
biotechnology and pharmaceutical production are not capable of detecting this
type of bacteria.
Based
on current information, Leptospira contamination
does not appear to occur frequently, and purification steps that follow cell
culture in a typical biotechnology operation would be expected to prevent
carryover to the finished drug substance. Testing of bulk drug substances
produced in the reported cases did not detect Leptospira spp., and no evidence of deleterious effects
on in-process product were observed in the known case study. However, these
types of bacteria can potentially:
- penetrate
sterilizing-grade membrane filters
- be present in
the manufacturing site environment
- impact
in-process production (e.g., production yields, impurity levels, process
performance)
- go undetected
due to the limitations of current compendial bioburden tests in detecting
this microbial genus
As a general
principle, manufacturers should use sound risk management and be aware of
unusual microbiota reported in the literature that may impact their
manufacturing processes (e.g., cell culture biotechnology, conventional sterile
drug manufacturing).
Manufacturers
should assess their operations, be aware of potential risks, and apply
appropriate risk management based on an understanding of possible or emerging
contamination risks. As appropriate, preventive measures should be implemented
during the product and process lifecycle.
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